Skip to main content
Home

Corning Museum of Glass

  • Cart
  • Login
  • Visit
      • Plan Your Visit
        • Admission
        • Directions
        • Tickets
      • Make Your Own Glass
      • Schools, Groups & Scouts
      • Calendar
      Affordable Family Fun
  • Collection
      • Exhibitions
        • Past
        • Current
        • Upcoming
      • Galleries
      • Innovation Center
      • Conservation
      • Rakow Commission
      • Collection Sets

      Browse the Glass Collection

  • Glassmaking
      • Glass Demos
        • Hot Glass Show
        • Flameworking
        • Optical Fiber
        • Glassbreaking
      • The Studio
        • Take Classes
        • Scholarships
        • Rentals
        • Residencies
      • Make Your Own Glass
        • GlassLab Design Program
        Take Classes
        Hot Glass Show
    • Research
        • Rakow Research Library
        • All About Glass
          • Articles
          • Videos
          • Glass Dictionary
          • Virtual Books
        • Museum Publications
          • New Glass Review
          • Journal of Glass Studies
        • Rakow Research Grant
        • Scientific Research

        Browse the Library Collection

    • Programs
        • Lectures & Seminars
        • Gallery Tours & Activities
        • 2300°
        • Classes
        • Kids & Family Programs
        • Live Streaming
        Calendar
    • Get Involved
        • Membership
        • Give
        • Volunteer
        • Teen Programs
        • Internship Opportunities
        Become a Member
    • Shop
        • Shop the GlassMarket
        • Glass Sales
        Shop Now

    Main menu

    • Visit
    • Collection
    • Glassmaking
    • Research
      • Library Collection Search
      • Rakow Research Library
      • All About Glass
        • Glass Dictionary
        • Tiffany Treasures: Favrile Glass from Special Collections
      • Museum Publications
      • Rakow Research Grant
      • Scientific Research
    • Programs
    • Get Involved
    • Shop

    More Like This

    • Tiffany treasures [electronic resource] : favrile glass from special collections / The Corning Museum of Glass.
      Tiffany treasures [electronic resource]: favrile glass from special collections / The Corning Museum of Glass.
      library
    • Tiffany Treasures: Favrile Glass from Special Collections
      Tiffany Treasures: Favrile Glass from Special Collections
      article
    • Tiffany gold : favrile glass from the Steeg collection.
      Tiffany gold: favrile glass from the Steeg collection.
      library
    • Glass from world's fairs, 1851-1904 / Jane Shadel Spillman.
      Glass from world's fairs, 1851-1904 / Jane Shadel Spillman.
      library
    • The cut and engraved glass of Corning 1868-1940 : [an exhibition at The Corning Museum of Glass] / Jane Shadel Spillman, Estelle Sinclaire Farrar.
      The cut and engraved glass of Corning 1868-1940: [an exhibition at The Corning Museum of Glass] / Jane Shadel Spillman, Estelle Sinclaire Farrar.
      library

    Tiffany Treasures: Favrile Glass from Special Collections

    Jane Shadel Spillman, curator of American Glass, discusses Louis Comfort Tiffany's blown glass showcased in "Tiffany Treasures: Favrile Glass from Special Collections" - on view at The Corning Museum of Glass November 1, 2009 - October 31, 2010.
    more
    • About
    • Contact
    • FAQ
    • Employment
    • Press Center
    • Rights & Reproductions
    • Facility Rental
    • Blog
    Corning Museum of Glass

    The Corning Museum of Glass - One Museum Way - Corning, NY 14830 800.732.6845 or 607.937.5371
    © 2002 - Corning Museum of Glass. All Rights Reserved.  Privacy Policy | Terms of Use
    Visitor Information In: 中文 | Español | 한글 | Français | Italiano | Deutsch | 日本語 | עברית | Pусский

    • facebook
    • twitter
    • flickr
    • youtube
    • pinterest
    Select mailing lists

    A type of glass with an iridescent surface, patented by Louis Comfort Tiffany (1848-1933) in 1894.

    See this entry in the Glass Dictionary

    The technique of forming an object by inflating a gather or gob of molten glass on the end of a blowpipe. Traditionally and in modern furnace working, the gaffer blows through the tube, slightly inflating the gob, which is then manipulated into the required form by swinging it, rolling it on a marver, or shaping it with tools or in a mold. It is then inflated to the desired size. In flameworking, one end of the glass tube is heated and closed immediately, after which the worker blows into the other end and manipulates the hot glass.

    See this entry in the Glass Dictionary